Hi jam,
Thanks for the question and welcome to the Forum!
For this Justify the Conclusion question we need to prove that "the government should not reduce taxes on textile imports" based on the following pair of principles:
1. If reducing taxes on imports would financially benefit many domestic consumers the government should
reduce import taxes: Financially Benefit Consumers
Reduce Taxes
2. An exception does exist: if a domestic industry would be significantly harmed by added competition the
government should NOT reduce import taxes: Harm Domestic Industry
NOT Reduce Taxes
So that second idea is how we're going to arrive at "not reduce taxes": we need to simply show that reducing import taxes would cause additional competition and harm some domestic industry.
That's what answer choice (E) gives us!
Answer choice (A) on the other hand plays on something we call a Mistaken Negation, where the absence of the sufficient (initial) condition is incorrectly taken to indicate something about the necessary condition. Specifically, when (A) tells us "NOT Financially Benefit Consumers," we've negated the sufficient part of the principle I numbered 1 above. But the absence of Financially Benefit Consumers gives us nothing! Without the trigger present—that is, without the condition that starts the relationship—we simply can't know anything. It's one of the classic conditional traps on the LSAT, and they're hoping you fall for it here...so remember, when the sufficient isn't there you have to stop. Go no further, you're done.
That's why (A) is incorrect in this question. We simply cannot know anything about what the government should or shouldn't do tax-wise until we have one of the two sufficient conditions I've listed above.
I hope that helps!
Jon Denning
PowerScore Test Preparation
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